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OECD WATER OUTLOOK TO 2050: MANAGING WATER RISKS & SEIZING GREEN GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES CNI Sustainability: Water Opportunities and Challenges for Development in Brazil Rio de Janeiro, 24 October 2013 Kathleen Dominique, Environmental Economist Water demand to increase by 55% by 2050 Global water demand, baseline 2000 and 2050 Source: OECD (2012), OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050; output from IMAGE 2 Human and economic costs of a changing climate: uncertain future for freshwater Change in annual temperature from 1990-2050 Source: OECD (2012), OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050; output from IMAGE 3 Number of people living in water-stressed river basins no water stress low water stress medium water stress severe water stress 10 000 Millions of people 9 000 8 000 7 000 6 000 5 000 4 000 3 000 2 000 1 000 0 2000 2050 OECD 2000 2050 BRIICS 2000 2050 RoW Source: OECD (2012), OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050; output from IMAGE 2000 2050 World Water pollution from urban sewage to increase 3-fold Nitrogen effluents from wastewater: baseline 1970 to 2050 Source: OECD (2012), OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050; output from IMAGE 5 Population lacking access to an improved water source or basic sanitation 1990-2050 BRIICS RoW OECD BRIICS ROW 2 000 1 100 millions of people millions of people OECD 1 000 900 800 700 1 800 1 600 1 400 1 200 600 1 000 500 800 400 600 300 200 400 100 200 0 0 1990 2010 Urban 2030 2050 1990 2010 2030 2050 1990 Rural Source: OECD (2012), OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050; output from IMAGE 2010 Urban 2030 2050 1990 2010 2030 Rural 2050 Ranking of coastal cities at risk from future flood losses, 2005 City Average Annual Losses (US$ mill) Average Annual Losses (% of GDP) 1 Guangzhou 687 1.32% 2 Miami 672 0.30% 3 New York – Newark 628 0.08% 4 New Orleans 507 1.21% 5 Mumbai 284 0.47% 6 Nagoya 260 0.26% 7 Tampa – St Petersburg 244 0.26% 8 Boston 237 0.13% 9 Shenzen 169 0.38% 10 Osaka - Kobe 120 0.03% Costs of global flood damage could rise from USD 6 billion to USD 1 trillion p.a. by 2050. Source: Stephane Hallegatte, Colin Green, Robert J. Nicholls and Jan Corfee-Morlot: “Future flood losses in major coastal cities” in nature climate change, 18 August 2013. 7 Water security risks Costs of water insecurity Drought in Brazil 2012 caused significant drop in production of food and raw materials and strained energy production. Government emergency credit fund of R$2.4 billion. 2011 floods in Thailand slashed 4th quarter GDP growth by 12%. “Know”, “target” and “manage” risks The future is uncertain. The risk approach encourages thinking systematically about uncertainty. The level of assessment and governance should be proportional to the risk faced. What is acceptable? Balance between economic, social and environmental consequences and the cost of improvement. For business community, help to secure social license to operate. 11 Policy action: managing water risks and seizing green growth opportunities • Improve incentives for managing risk – Robust water resource allocation (efficient, flexible, equitable risk sharing) – Remove environmentally-harmful subsidies (e.g. under pricing water, productionlinked agricultural subsidies) – Water pricing, abstraction charges, pollution charges, insurance schemes • Encourage green innovation – Change the economics: make pollution and wasteful production & consumption more expensive – Reduce barriers to uptake and diffusion of innovative water technologies and techniques 12 Decoupling water use from growth OECD freshwater abstraction by major use and GDP (1990=100) GDP Population 160 Irrigation Public supply 150 140 130 120 110 100 90 Source: OECD Environmental Data 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 80 1990 0- 13 Water pricing - reducing demand % Ownership against fee structure Source: OECD (2011), Greening Household Behaviour: The Role of Public Policy 14 Policy action: managing water risks and seizing green growth opportunities • Improve information and data – Better “knowing” the risks, including perceptions • Invest in infrastructure (“grey” and “green”) – Financing needs considerable: • 0.35-1.2% of GDP over next 20 years in OECD countries • Developing countries: USD 54 billion to maintain systems, another USD 17 billion to meet MDGs (per year, estimates vary widely) – Sources: 3 T’s (tariffs, taxes, transfers) – Principles: beneficiary pays, polluter pays, equity and coherence – Combine “grey” and “green” to improve scalability and flexibility to adjust to change • Making water reform happen – National Policy Dialogues 15 Muito Obrigada www.oecd.org/water Contact: [email protected]